The
Russian philosopher and
religious thinker Nikolai Berdyaev (1874-1948) experienced momentous
historical changes in Russia and Europe during his lifetime, while
himself reflecting in his many books the panoply of thinking and
interpretation from his earliest years as a student revolutionary to
his later years as a Christian existentialist.

Berdyaev's books addressed vital intellectual and social
issues of
modern and traditional thought. Taken as a whole, his works were like a
single spiral evolving from one basic theme to another, encompassing
new ideas with every volume. Thus, the intriguingly-titled Solitude and Society
(first published in 1934) is not solely about its title issues. The
book first addresses
groundwork philosophical and religious issues under the rubric of
"meditations" before entering upon its title theme nearly half-way
through the book. Even so, the topic of solitude is only one part in
the whole of Berdyaev's larger interests addressed in this book.

The section titles, and number of chapters following in parentheses, reveal the
progress of Berdyaev's thinking in this work. Each section will be
summarized in order to place solitude into Berdyaev's larger philosophical context.

The Philosopher's Tragic Situation and the Problems of
Philosophy (2)

The Subject and Objectification (4)

The Ego, Solitude and Society (3)

The Evil of Time. Change and Eternity (3)

The Personality, Society and Communion (4)

1. The Philosopher's Tragic Situation.

Berdyaev defends philosophy against its two "avowed enemies,"
religion and science. The chief error of religion is to objectify
itself, to make revealed truth external to human consciousness, wherein
true religion is "adulterated by the immediate reactions of the human
community in which it takes place." Further, religion embeds its
notions of truth, derived from human expressions (such as the Bible)
and false or flawed philosophies, attempting to objectify its
base of authority.

On the other hand, science identified philosophy
with the scaffolds of religion. And in turn, philosophy that had become
the
handmaiden of religion could not extricate itself from the attacks of
science until philosophers recognized the weakness of philosophy
attempting objectivity. Hence a philosophy of existence emerged. The
philosopher's tragic situation is that the objectifying criterion
of both religion and science excludes true knowledge that springs from
the personal, individual experience of the mystery of Being.

The Ego is the inevitable foundation of all knowledge, for
true
philosophy is not satisfied with only that which has traditionally been
defined as objective. Nothing is exempt from affectivity. "The
subjective approach is the only one likely to elicit a revelation of
the original truth contained in primitive Being." True philosophy
discovers that its function is to "purify man's anthropological nature so as
to reveal his essential nature, the transcendental man" which is not
identical to the abstract transcendental consciousness. This
identification is personalist, not egoist, subjectivist, individualist,
empirical, or nominalist.

2. Subject and Objectification.

"German Idealism dealt a blow to the objectivism of Greek and
Scholastic philosophy from which it cannot hope to recover," notes Bedyaev. Both had
ignored the reality of human experience and knowledge, objectifying
ideas and concepts, relegating all to reason and external knowledge,
versus the psychological and social. "Objectivity can never be
synonymous with truth, with an independent attitude towards
subjective states." At the same time, the Ego can be released from
self-confining egocentricity and towards the person as subject (not
object). Active human apprehension of the world completes objective
creation. Subjectivity conceives of meaning and value and spirit.

The German idealists like Kant and Hegel, had, however, "built
up a
metaphysical system of a subjective basis, but in the process they
interpreted the subjective in an objective and non-existential way."
Acknowledging the influence of Dostoyevsky and Nietzsche, Berdyaev
celebrates Kierkegaard as the first modern breakthrough to existential
philosophy, followed by Heidegger and Jaspers.

But Heidegger's
vision, like Schopenhauer's and Jaspers', is essentially pessimistic.
Kierkegaard does not interpret existence but expresses it. Yet,
Berdyaev notes, "man's apprehensive faculty is invariably confined
to the outer fringes of Being." Berdyaev sees the way past this
dilemma
in noting that

knowledge is the apprehension of Being through
Being. ... The existential nature of the subject is one of the spiritual
ways of apprehending the mystery of Being.

Thus, existential
intellection illuminates Being to some degree, for knowledge is
immanent in Being and fundamentally irrational, as is Being.The static
notion of the transcendental must become the dynamic notion of
transcendence.

All of this addresses the individual. The world, objective
processes
and structures, cannot apprehend what the individual apprehends as
subject. "Reality is originally part of inner existence," but
objectification overrides and debases individual apprehension,
and negates its relevance. Objective knowledge is always abstracted from
the subjective, but it usurps the prerogative of the spirit. Nothing
objective can claim absolute knowledge, can declare itself true because
real. Concepts evolved to justify the already-placed objective world.
But, summarizing Jaspers, Berdyaev notes:

No concept is able to reveal
the purpose of existence or its underlying values. The existential
mystery revealing purpose is that wherein the subject and the predicate
are identified.

Even God cannot be objectified, argues Berdyaev,
without becoming
neither divine or human, without becoming an objectification of a given
culture and its experience of religion and theology as a social
experience, its community as society, then State and Church, which
Berdyaev, like Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, and the Russian thinkers of his
youthful anarchist days, had long maintained.

There is community among those who do not hold with objective
knowledge. Berdyaev points out the false starts of those with insight about
the nature of knowledge who nevertheless try to transcend the rational
without seeing that knowledge in embedded in the social, in the knowing
subject, and in existence itself. Knowledge participates in
Being; the objective world is a contrivance torn from the whole.
"Existence is not fully realized until we pass from the
subject
to the human personality."

Knowledge itself remains objectified and irrational until it
can
be
apprehended creatively by human existence, which alone makes existence
significant, illuminating Being. "The subject can orientate himself by
means of Existential philosophy, which dispenses with objectification:
the human subject does not apprehend the object, but the revelation of
human existence, and, through it, that of the divine
world.

Berdyaev criticizes intellectualist philosophy (beginning with
Plato and Aristotle) because it denies the subject, and thus denies the mystery of
existence. In short, it denies the freedom of the self to identify
existentially a creative apprehension of knowledge, which is a creative
manifestation of what others will call mysticism but which is basically
a reconciliation of philosophy and existence.

At this point, Berdyaev has set his position on philosophy to
show
that all knowledge has a social content and context, a ground in
existence and not in mere reason and intellection. Human communication is
subjective, yielding social expressions such as religion, which does
not serve community and communication but has instead become an "instrument of
social organization and mystification," a perversion resulting in the "objectifying of revealed truths," that is, of those
truths revealed subjectively.

Having established these points, Berdyaev can address the topic of
solitude.

3. The Ego, Solitude, and Society.

Berdyaev, however, does not clearly define or identify solitude except
to
consider it a social aspect of the Ego. The Ego presupposes an awareness of
other selves in the world. As the Ego moves out into the world,
encountering non-Ego and other Egos, it (potentially) encounters the
Thou. "The intuition of another Ego's spiritual life is equivalent to
communion with it," Berdyaev states. At the same time, "A clear distinction should be
made between communication and participation," where communication is
symbolic and dependent upon degrees of objectification. "Communion
implies reciprocity." Berdyaev cites Freud's evolving of eros into love
but overshadowed by death. In all this, however, solitude remains a
primitive and embryonic state for Ego.

The pursuit of knowledge is
undoubtedly
one of the ways of overcoming solitude; it compels us to abandon our
self-centered isolation, and situates us in another space and time
where
we are brought in contact with the Other Self. It is an escape from
solitude, a way of getting to know the other Ego, the divine world.

Solitude is transcended by identifying with objects -- the
facile way
of society -- or by "entering into communion with the Thou." Berdyaev
identifies the core problem in objectification, from collectivism to
institutions of church, state, society -- each incapable of
transcending, each failing to facilitate communion with the Thou.

4. The Evil of Time, Change and Eternity.

Existential philosophy identifies human destiny in terms of
time.
Time exists because of activity, because of the passage from non-Being
to Being. Christian philosophy also supports historical dynamism
and evolution in time. But time is disintegrated eternity, fragments
inevitably decomposed and tragic. Time objectifies experience, yet an
act in the present can overshadow the past and future.

Time is evil because it is a degradation, "a degraded state of
human destiny." Humanity strives to "experience the plenitude" in a
single moment, in the creative act, whether the basest experience of
eros or the divine element of mysticism, dispensing with time and
circumstance, overcoming death for authentic Being.

Memory consolidates past into present, relieving "temporal
disintegration." Memory brings knowledge -- which is always past --
into personality and the Ego. Knowledge constitutes the ontological
ground for creativity and communion. Yet the past is non-existent, only
apprehended by memory, only resolved by knowledge. As merciless change, time is gathered up into
present by knowledge, which is memory. "The eternal present thus
revealed is not a static present," Berdyaev says, but one in the process of incessant
creation outside the frontiers of disintegrated time.

Berdyaev argues that free spiritual activity, the inner life
-- not evolution, determinism, or natural causality, which objectify
change -- alone transcends time, determines time. No instant of time has
intrinsic value, and today technology, which is "entirely orientated towards the
future," materializes and objectifies human existence more and more, so
that time accelerates, and the Ego loses the creative capacity.

As life becomes more
technical and mechanical, so the evil of time becomes increasingly virulent.
The full implication of this, however, can only be grasped from within
by means of Existential philosophy.

Berdyaev argues that experiencing the present without the
future or eternity is oblivion -- the discarding of memory, which is the essence of
personality. Identifying the present with the eternal overcomes time
and asserts not oblivion but plentitude. Past and future have no
ontological existence: states of Heaven and Hell are false objectifications,
constituting an "exteriorization of inner events."

Berdyaev notes pointedly that despite rich and pregnant
symbolism, "Christian eschatology throws no light" on these profound
issues of time, future, destiny, and eternity. Rather each of us
confronts the mystery of personality alone, or in communion with others also directing themselves to this mystery.

5. The Personality, Society, and Communion.

Berdyaev highlights existentialism's distinction between the
Ego and the personality. "I am an Ego before I become a personality."
Yet the Ego's striving to realize personality is the source of human
suffering. The personality is not the individual but the supra- or
extra-natural evolving consciousness and its total expression of all
acts and their potentialities, the union of mind, body, and spirit. The
persona, the social mask presented to the world, is both the
personality and the social intersecting. Yet the personality is
extra-natural, extra-social. To overcome the sense of solitude at this
point of intersection is the personality's great challenge.

Only a sense of community -- not of mere society -- is
compatible with a person whose self-integration has transcended
original solitude. But where is that community? Berdyaev expresses this
"community" not as any objectification but as an "inspiration to
commune with the
Thou and the We." Only in this sense is the personality social, but in
a
metaphysical or spiritual way, not a political or worldly one.

In Berdyaev's understanding, solitude is the negative sense
of failing to transcend. He states: "Solitude is the direct outcome of
the pressure exerted on the personality by the natural and social
worlds, of its conversion into object." But the most mature personality
will be conscious of a necessary solitude as an apartness from both
nature and society, even when a sense of "communion alleviates the
nostalgia associated with solitude."

Berdyaev notes that this
philosophical and spiritual understanding is expressed in its varied
ways by world religions. Even as a Christian existentialist, Berdyaev
understands Christian symbolism as human expressions of fundamental
questions about Being, which thus constitute "revelations." Nothing in
the world -- certainly not institutionalizations of the questioning
spirit -- will satisfy because they are objectifications.

Berdyaev concludes that all existential thinking, from
Kierkegaard to even Feuerbach to Nietzsche, let alone latter thinkers, have served to reveal the false
objectification of God. Deeply affected by the contemporary events of
his era, Berdyaev concludes that now is the time to rediscover
humanity afresh. No political or social thought can substitute for the
individual search for communion: the search for heartfelt love and
the overcoming of alienation from society and the world. Only this
rediscovery of human nature can apprehend "the degree of community
between men, their communion in the spirit."